Corrections: September 19, 2017

Sept. 19, 2017

FRONT PAGE

An article on Monday about the effect on Facebook and other technology companies of government efforts around the world to regulate online activity misspelled the surname of Facebook’s head of public policy in Europe. He is Richard Allan, not Allen.

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An article on Saturday about a lawsuit against the virtual reality start-up Upload misstated the age of Elizabeth Scott, the plaintiff in the case. She is 26, not 27.

NATIONAL

An article on Friday about a new federal rule designed to protect hospital patients and nursing home residents during natural disasters misidentified a position once held by Keith Myers of MorseLife Health System. He was a member of the Florida Board of Nursing Home Administrators; he was never the board’s chairman.

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An article on Saturday about the Trump administration’s refusal to release the names of visitors to the Trump family’s Mar-a-Lago resort misstated the nature of a federal court order related to the visitors. The court ordered the release of all related records subject to the Freedom of Information Act, not a log of all presidential visitors to Mar-a-Lago. The article and an accompanying picture caption also misstated the amount of time the president has spent at the resort in the first months of his presidency. He has been there a total of 25 days; he has not visited 25 times.

NEW YORK

A picture caption on Saturday with an article about accusations of sexual harassment at Rochester University referred incorrectly to Dr. T. Florian Jaeger, who was accused of sexual harassment and then cleared by the university. He is not facing a federal lawsuit. (A federal discrimination complaint has been filed against the university.)

BUSINESS DAY

An article on Saturday about insurance companies that cater to high-net-worth individuals misstated the estimated cost of cleaning up after Hurricane Irma in Florida. It is $50 billion, not $50 million.

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An article last Tuesday about Tesla’s decision to extend the range of vehicles owned by individuals in Florida described incorrectly criticism of the decision. Critics said that the ability to make the upgrade raised questions of corporate greed, not that the upgrade itself was an act of greed.

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An article on Wednesday about the collapse of the British public relations firm Bell Pottinger misstated the connection of one of the firm’s former clients, Aleksandr G. Lukashenko, to Belarus. He is the current president and dictator of the country; he is not a former dictator.

SPORTS

An article on Monday about highlights from the weekend’s N.F.L. matches misstated the ways in which the Minnesota Vikings scored 9 points in their most recent game. They had a field goal and a touchdown with a missed extra point, not three field goals.

OBITUARIES

An obituary on Sunday about the Rev. René Laurentin, a Roman Catholic theologian who devoted his career to investigating reports of supernatural religious visions, omitted part of the name of a journal in which he explained the church’s guidelines for discerning an apparition. It is The Call of Heaven: The Journal of Messengers and Apparitions — not simply The Journal of Messengers and Apparitions.

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An obituary on Monday about Penny Chenery, the owner and breeder of the racehorse Secretariat, misspelled part of the name of the racing stable owned by Elizabeth Arden Graham. It was Maine Chance Farm, not Main Chance Farm.

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An obituary on Monday about the gallery owner, collector and writer Greg Escalante misstated the name of a store in Laguna Beach, Calif., where he once worked. It was the Pottery Shack, not the Pottery Shed.

Errors are corrected during the press run whenever possible, so some errors noted here may not have appeared in all editions.